Picture of what the auto-infuser looks like. It takes an Hr. for it to complete.

First off the steroid treatment went better than any other had gone in the past. I did not have the horrible bad attitude, well no worse than normal, and my tastes were not negatively impacted. Day one of the prednisone went very well. The nurse offered to leave a permanent IV needle in, but it would be in my hand. I told her I do not mind getting stuck, my mistake. Day 2 a new nurse it took 8 sticks before she was able to get a vein that worked for her. This was not the first time tis has happened while I have taken prednisone. Apparently prednisone does awful things to your veins because normally I am a very easy stick. Unfortunately, day 2 was not yet over and because she ran out of IV needles and had to switch to her personal supply of butterfly needles I moved and the injection became occluded. I was 2/3 done with the IV and she asked if I wanted to quit for the night; I think it was pretty clear she wanted to call it a night and not battle getting another IV in me. I told her no I wanted to finish the medicine and two sticks later I was ready to go with a stern warning not to move. 🙂 Day 3 went much better.

In the interim I am supposed to have blood work done to test for the JVC antibody. I tried twice and lost the lab slip. I have to assume that was for the best because getting the lab work done is a waste of money. I do not plan on taking Tysabri or Tecfidera that carry the risk of PML at this time. The Dr. did think that Tecfidera was a good option for me at our previous visit. I do not plan on signing up for the Death Therapy as a treatment.

I will not do the interferons because I think they are garbage, and they did not do much for me. That only leaves Copaxone as drug, or nothing. We look up Copaxone and learn as much as you can without a full understanding of the immune system. 🙁 I also look up how much it will cost through my insurance. The drug is roughly $5,000 a month with a copay of $150. The $150 is doable, but I am on a high deductible plan so on January 1 I would have to eat the $5000! If that is the case it is a no go.

Off to the follow-up with the neuro. A minor exam and in his professional opinion I am walking better. I guess that is why he makes the big bucks because I had not noticed my walking had improved. 🙁 The rest of the brief visit was discussing Copaxone. I told him the $5000 price tag, and his response is that it is a very expensive drug to make it is not all profit. He sounded like a drug shill from Teva. If that drug costs more than $5 to make I would be shocked almost to death. There is obviously good money in drugs so I need to continue my own drug research. MVT with the proper marketing certainly can help a lot of people. 😉

To wrap this all up Teva/Copaxone called today. They wanted to discuss the initial setup with me. I said that is fine, and we got that all worked out. I then brought up their $5000 per month cost. She said that they can eat the first part for the high-deductible plan and possibly the copays from then on. I thought OK as they are gouging my insurance and I am making my insurance more expensive for everybody in 2017. 🙁

As a postscript I was looking at Tecfidera on the NMSS site. I could not shake the BG-12 name it had before it was Tecfidera. I was certain I had written about it, and I had. BG-12/ Tecfidera was a Mold Killer! Who in their right mind is going to take a mold killer as a treatment!

Yes, we all wish! 🙂 There is a study to see if chocolate can easy the effects of fatigue. Good news you do not have to wait for the results; you can try this yourself! 😉

Before I even read the article I went to Eriksgirl that they are doing a study of chocolate as a treatment for MS. In light of that I encouraged her to run some trials of chocolate on herself to see if it improves things for her. She was fully on board. What can you not fix with chocolate! 😉 As I walked away she was unwrapping some dark chocolate with a smile on her face (I guess it worked for her).

I proceeded to read the article and the key is the flavonoids. That is great for my wife and her “love” of Moser Roth 80% Dark. I detest dark chocolate, and I am pretty certain my peanut M&Ms do not contain significant amounts of flavonoids. I suppose we will have to run our own study here and pit Eriksgirl and Moser Roth vs and me with peanut M&Ms. My hypothesis is that there will be no losers. 😉